Marriage and Family Review
Volume 35, Issue 3-4, 2004, Pages 21-43
Parenting Style and Child Outcomes in Chinese and Immigrant Chinese Families-Current Findings and Cross-Cultural Considerations in Conceptualization and Research (Article)
Lim S.-L.* ,
Lim B.K.
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a
San Diego, CA, United States
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b
Marriage and Family Therapy, Bethel Seminary, San Diego, CA, United States
Abstract
Parenting style is an important familial variable in the study of child development. Unlike research on white populations, results on how parenting style affects child outcomes are less conclusive in Chinese and Chinese immigrant families. This is largely due to problems associated with applying western typologies, such as Baumrind's prototypes, in research on Chinese families. Studies that use an orthogonal approach, in which different parenting dimensions are examined, yield more interpretable data. This article examines current research on the associations between the two key parenting dimensions of warmth and control on child outcomes in Chinese and Chinese immigrant families. Warmth is associated with positive child outcomes. However, the effect of parental control on child psychosocial outcomes is unclear. Qualitative differences in Chinese parenting call for more research that focuses on conceptualizing and operationalizing dimensions of Chinese parenting that are both culturally specific and culturally sensitive. © 2003 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-1642603389&doi=10.1300%2fJ002v35n03_03&partnerID=40&md5=5e79b71d965f032057be9a1a62eaffb0
DOI: 10.1300/J002v35n03_03
ISSN: 01494929
Cited by: 45
Original Language: English